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The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast


Jan 20, 2016

If you have pensions or investments, what if your provider fails? Do you lose everything? What protections are there in place? In this week’s show, I’ll be looking at what happens when it all goes wrong.

What if your provider fails?

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7IM LogoThis podcast is brought to you with the help of Seven Investment Management, a firm of investment managers based in London. They specialise in multi-asset investing, bringing institutional investing techniques to ordinary people like you and me. 7IM put their name to my show and to my site because they believe in what I’m doing, trying to get decent, easy-to-understand financial information out to the world. I’m very grateful to them for their support. You can see what they’re up to at 7im.co.uk

What if your provider fails?

Today’s financial landscape is more complex than it has ever been. We’ve got platforms, wrappers, funds, trusts, and lots of different levels of investment. You might hold some shares within a fund, within an ISA held on a platform. That’s four levels of custodianship!

But what happens if one or other of those providers goes belly up? While unlikely, it cannot be discounted, as the financial crisis of 2007/8/9 taught us. Prior to that, this ‘what happens if’ question was largely theoretical. But then people started losing money in Icelandic banks, and stuff got real.

So we need to understand what protections are in place for investors - UK investors of course - and look at some principles for making sure you’re as protected as possible, wherever you live.

In this session, you'll discover:

  1. How the Financial Services Compensation Scheme works, and its limitations
  2. Why it's important to understand who owns what?
  3. The simplest way to make sure your investments are always protected
  4. Why two different banks are not always two different banks
  5. Why you shouldn't lose too much sleep
  6. The one thing you definitely shouldn't do in a bid to protect your money

I think that as with all things to do with worst-case scenarios, you should be knowledgable, but not let any of it drive your actions too much. It can be pretty hairy, handing over your hard-earned dosh to someone else to look after, but we do live in a developed part of the world with various protections in place. You must exercise caution and do your research, and then, to a certain extent, trust the system to look after you, as it has for countless people before you.

If you’re concerned about anything - either email me or  leave a comment below.